Study on the Effect of Surface Roughness on the Spectral Unmixing of Mixed Pixels

In the spectrum measurement experiment, the roughness of the object surface is an essential factor that cannot be ignored. In this experiment, a group of mixed pixel samples with different mixing ratios were designed, and these samples were printed on four kinds of papers with different roughness. T...

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Main Authors: Haonan Zhang, Xingping Wen, Junlong Xu, Dayou Luo, Ping He
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Spectroscopy
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/5796860
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spelling doaj-f97c073df4464e9684b104a2405af1932020-11-25T03:01:35ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Spectroscopy2314-49202314-49392020-01-01202010.1155/2020/57968605796860Study on the Effect of Surface Roughness on the Spectral Unmixing of Mixed PixelsHaonan Zhang0Xingping Wen1Junlong Xu2Dayou Luo3Ping He4Faculty of Land Resource Engineering, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming 650093, ChinaFaculty of Land Resource Engineering, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming 650093, ChinaFaculty of Land Resource Engineering, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming 650093, ChinaFaculty of Land Resource Engineering, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming 650093, ChinaFaculty of Land Resource Engineering, Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming 650093, ChinaIn the spectrum measurement experiment, the roughness of the object surface is an essential factor that cannot be ignored. In this experiment, a group of mixed pixel samples with different mixing ratios were designed, and these samples were printed on four kinds of papers with different roughness. The spectral characteristics of mixed pixels with different roughness are quantitatively analyzed by using the measured spectral data. The linear spectral mixture model is used for spectral decomposition, and the effect of roughness on the unmixing precision of mixed pixels was studied. The surface roughness will affect the reflectivity of the mixed pixel. Specifically, the higher the roughness is, the higher the reflectivity of the sample is. This phenomenon is more noticeable when the proportion of white endmember (PWE) is large, and as the white area ratio decreases, the reflectance difference gradually decreases. When the surface roughness of the sample is less than 3.339 μm, the spectral decomposition is performed using a linear spectral mixing model in the visible light band. The average error of the unmixing is less than 0.53%, which is lower than the conventional standard spectral measurement error. In other words, when the surface roughness of the sample is controlled within a specific range, the effect of roughness on the unmixing accuracy of the mixed pixels is small, and this effect can be almost ignored. Multiple scattering within the pixels is the key to model selection and unmixing accuracy, when using the ASD FieldSpec3 spectrometer to perform spectral reflectance measurement and linear spectral unmixing experiments. If the surface roughness of the sample to be measured is less than the maximum wavelength of the spectrometer, the experimental results believe that the photon energy is mainly mirror reflection on the surface of the object and diffuse reflection. At this time, it is still a better choice to use a linear spectral mixing model to decompose the mixed pixels.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/5796860
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Haonan Zhang
Xingping Wen
Junlong Xu
Dayou Luo
Ping He
spellingShingle Haonan Zhang
Xingping Wen
Junlong Xu
Dayou Luo
Ping He
Study on the Effect of Surface Roughness on the Spectral Unmixing of Mixed Pixels
Journal of Spectroscopy
author_facet Haonan Zhang
Xingping Wen
Junlong Xu
Dayou Luo
Ping He
author_sort Haonan Zhang
title Study on the Effect of Surface Roughness on the Spectral Unmixing of Mixed Pixels
title_short Study on the Effect of Surface Roughness on the Spectral Unmixing of Mixed Pixels
title_full Study on the Effect of Surface Roughness on the Spectral Unmixing of Mixed Pixels
title_fullStr Study on the Effect of Surface Roughness on the Spectral Unmixing of Mixed Pixels
title_full_unstemmed Study on the Effect of Surface Roughness on the Spectral Unmixing of Mixed Pixels
title_sort study on the effect of surface roughness on the spectral unmixing of mixed pixels
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Spectroscopy
issn 2314-4920
2314-4939
publishDate 2020-01-01
description In the spectrum measurement experiment, the roughness of the object surface is an essential factor that cannot be ignored. In this experiment, a group of mixed pixel samples with different mixing ratios were designed, and these samples were printed on four kinds of papers with different roughness. The spectral characteristics of mixed pixels with different roughness are quantitatively analyzed by using the measured spectral data. The linear spectral mixture model is used for spectral decomposition, and the effect of roughness on the unmixing precision of mixed pixels was studied. The surface roughness will affect the reflectivity of the mixed pixel. Specifically, the higher the roughness is, the higher the reflectivity of the sample is. This phenomenon is more noticeable when the proportion of white endmember (PWE) is large, and as the white area ratio decreases, the reflectance difference gradually decreases. When the surface roughness of the sample is less than 3.339 μm, the spectral decomposition is performed using a linear spectral mixing model in the visible light band. The average error of the unmixing is less than 0.53%, which is lower than the conventional standard spectral measurement error. In other words, when the surface roughness of the sample is controlled within a specific range, the effect of roughness on the unmixing accuracy of the mixed pixels is small, and this effect can be almost ignored. Multiple scattering within the pixels is the key to model selection and unmixing accuracy, when using the ASD FieldSpec3 spectrometer to perform spectral reflectance measurement and linear spectral unmixing experiments. If the surface roughness of the sample to be measured is less than the maximum wavelength of the spectrometer, the experimental results believe that the photon energy is mainly mirror reflection on the surface of the object and diffuse reflection. At this time, it is still a better choice to use a linear spectral mixing model to decompose the mixed pixels.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/5796860
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